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Tag: Oprah Winfrey

  • Book excerpt:

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    Avid Reader Press


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    Broadcasting superstar Oprah Winfrey, who has struggled with weight for much of her life, and Dr. Ania Jastreboff, of the Yale School of Medicine, have teamed up to examine the biology of obesity, offering a new way forward.

    Their new book is “Enough: Your Health, Your Weight, and What It’s Like To Be Free” (‎to be published Jan. 13 by Avid Reader Press).

    Read an excerpt below, and don’t miss Jane Pauley’s interview with Winfrey and Jastreboff on “CBS Sunday Morning” January 11!


    “Enough: Your Health, Your Weight, and What It’s Like To Be Free”

    Prefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.


    Enough Shame and Blame

    My patient Alice began experiencing self-blame in childhood. Her well-intentioned mom put her on diets when she was in her early teens. Even before that, she had started to develop what she eventually called the “self-hatred voice.” She vividly remembers when she was ten years old, sitting in the front yard with her legs bent, seeing the inside curvature of her leg and wanting it to be smaller. “This is the line where your muscle is, and on the inside is a curve. That’s the fat and the extra skin. I thought, ‘Oh, if I could just cut that off, then my leg would be perfect.’ I had a pen, and I drew the line where I thought my legs should be and where the fat should be cut off. I just knew that I was larger than I wanted to be.” Alice lived in Vermont at the time, and her mother had a garden where she grew all sorts of vegetables—lettuce, carrots, cucumbers. “I just remember eating salad, so much salad!” Alice recalls. At thirteen, she sat at the table, thinking, “Here’s a plate with three pieces of lettuce and a carrot,” and wondering how she was going to get through basketball practice or soccer without passing out or blowing the game for her teammates.

    A few years later, her mother put herself and Alice on a no-carb diet. “Atkins was kinda big,” Alice says. Her father and two younger brothers were exempt; it was only for the girls of the family. Which basically meant Alice and her mother were still eating everything from the garden, except no turnips, because turnips had “too many carbs.”

    After three days, Alice revolted. She reached for some crackers in the cupboard: “Mom, I just ate an entire sleeve of saltines!” Hearing this, her mother was not upset with her. Alice shared, “She was desperate for carbs, too, and ate three saltines herself. And then dutifully returned to her no-carb diet.”

    At sixteen, Alice started tracking her weight for sports. The self-hatred voice in her mind began to be very specific and explicit. “The cupcake you just ate—what is the number of calories in it? What is the number of carbs?” She described that it wouldn’t let up, not even for just one tiny-teeny bite. It was unrelenting.

    Fast-forward more than thirty years, and by the time Alice was nearly fifty, she had tried every diet and workout program under the sun: forty-seven of them, to be exact. Atkins, keto, South Beach, the Zone, low carb, no carb, ultra-low fat, liquid only, Jillian Michaels, Jane Fonda, Suzanne Somers, full-body HIIT workouts, gym memberships, a YMCA weight coach, DietBet, StepBet, a Mediterranean diet, a vegetarian diet, the raw food diet, intermittent fasting. She’d even tried hypnosis. She had three teenagers, a fulfilling job in communications, and a loving boyfriend. She struggled with obesity despite spending much of her adult life tracking every morsel of food, eating mostly healthful meals, and exercising every day. She had successfully lost weight countless times. That wasn’t the issue. The problem was that she always gained it back. She always blamed herself for having obesity. She did not know about the biology of obesity, yet.

    From “Enough: Your Health, Your Weight, and What It’s Like To Be Free” by Ania M. Jastreboff, M.D., Ph.D., and Oprah Winfrey. Copyright © 2025. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


    Get the book here:

    “Enough: Your Health, Your Weight, and What It’s Like To Be Free”

    Buy locally from Bookshop.org


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  • “Enough”: Oprah Winfrey on her weight-loss lessons

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    Our first question to Oprah Winfrey: “You always wear really beautiful clothes. Always have. And I wonder if it’s a joy to get dressed now?”

    “I can tell you what a joy it is to actually pack clothes that you know are gonna fit and you’re gonna feel good in them,” Winfrey replied. “I mean, it is a joy to get dressed. That is such a powerful first question, Jane Pauley, really!”

    Powerful is one of the superlatives befitting Oprah Winfrey, one of the best-known and most-admired people on the planet, and one of the richest. But for all her success, she seemed powerless against a weight problem, a deeply personal struggle she has waged publicly and openly. 

    In 1985, when her talk show, “AM Chicago,” was getting national attention, Oprah appeared on “The Tonight Show” with guest host Joan Rivers.

    “And I’m sitting there, and we’re toward the end of the interview, and Joan turns to me and, ‘So, tell me, you know, how’d you gain the weight?’” Oprah recalled. Her response? “I ate a lot.”

    “I was stunned in that moment, when I look back and I see that moment. But I left feeling humiliated and embarrassed, but not the least bit anger, not the least bit of anger or being upset about it,” she said.

    Why? “Because I thought, ‘She’s right.’”

    Jane Pauley interview Oprah Winfrey. 

    CBS News


    Over the next 40 years, Oprah would gain and lose hundreds of pounds. In the fall of 1988, after a strict four-month liquid diet, a new svelte Oprah appeared wearing size 10 Calvins, weighing 145, and pulling a wagon with 67 pounds of animal fat

    It was all back, plus 25 more, when she went to the Daytime Emmy Awards four years later. “And I go to the Emmys praying not to win, literally praying not to win, because I don’t want to have to get up out of my seat and have everybody watch me do that walk to the stage,” she said.

    She started over again the next day, working out with an on-call personal trainer this time. In 1994 she even ran a marathon.

    Oprah knew how to lose weight … she did it over and over. She says her body was seeking a range of 211 to 218. “So usually, by the time I would hit 211 when I first went on the diet for the wagon of fat and pulled out the wagon of fat, when I did my first marathon, once I get to 211, I go, ‘Oh, I gotta do something.’ But now I understand that the biology of me, which is different than the biology of you and everybody else – every body, all of us, has our own – but no matter what I did, no matter how hard I worked, no matter what, it was always trying to get my body back to 211.”

    Not because 211 is her ideal weight, but rather a “set point”: a genetically-influenced weight range. Oprah calls it the “enough point.”

    “Enough” is also the title of a new book she co-wrote with Dr. Ania Jastreboff from the Yale School of Medicine, who says, for most people, an enough point is “the weight that they kind of always gravitate to.”

    enough-cover-avid-reader-press-900.jpg

    Avid Reader Press


    So, to lose weight, you cut back on calories, and start craving high-fat food , or you eat less – but nothing changes. “Our body’s like, ‘Well, if you’re gonna eat less, then I’m gonna make you more efficient. I’m gonna make you burn less,’” said Jastreboff. “So what happens is, together, collectively, we end up eating more, and burning less.”

    “It’s the enemy within, which is in our brains,” I said. “So, now that we know what the problem is, the hormones that drive people, why don’t people just stop obeying it?”

    “That would be like trying to control something that is not in your control,” Jastreboff said. “That would be like holding your breath for the rest of your life. Every time somebody says, ‘Just eat less, move more,’ we’re asking our patients to control their biology and hold their breath. And it’s just not possible. And why would we do that? We don’t do that for any other disease.”

    And that’s what the American Medical Association says obesity is — a disease. A treatable disease. But the good news is that, if it’s a disease, it’s not your fault.

    “It’s not my fault, Jane! It’s not my fault,” Oprah said. “And I could weep right now, could weep right now. I’m not going to! But I could weep right now for all of the many days and nights I journaled about this being my fault, and why can’t I conquer this thing?”

    In the last decade, nearly a dozen weight management drugs have been approved for chronic weight management.  And for millions, drugs like GLP–1s are the answer to their prayers. Finally, a scientifically-supported, medically-approved weight-loss strategy that worked. And yet, Oprah resisted. “I was so motivated by shame that I felt I could not take the drug,” she said, “because if I took the drug – I, who had been the poster child for I can do it, I can do it, I can do it, willpower, willpower, let’s just get more willpower – if I couldn’t do it, then I would be shamed, and ashamed of myself for not being able to do it myself.”

    The medications don’t work for everyone, and some can’t tolerate side effects ranging from nausea to gallstones. But it’s been two years since Oprah finally started medication, and it’s working for her. She says she is now down to her marathon weight of 155. “And so, that’s it for me. I’m gonna just try to maintain,” she said.

    “Well done. Because I thought 160 was your goal weight?” I asked.

    “Yeah, yeah, it was,” Oprah said, “but as I continue to work out here the combination of the medication and hiking every day and resistance training has given me the body that I had when I was running a marathon. So, I was 40 and feeling really good, but to be able to be 71 and feel that I am in the best shape of my life feels better than it did when I was 40.”

    “I would submit that you would have been a phenomenal success, but I don’t think you would have become ‘Oprah’ if you hadn’t had the weight issue and been open about it and shared it,” I said.

    “Yeah. I would agree with that,” she said. “And that’s why I don’t have any regrets about it. There’s a wonderful spiritual, African American spiritual, called, ‘I Wouldn’t Take Nothing For My Journey Now.’ 

    I wouldn’t take nothing for my journey now
    for my journey now
    for my journey now
    I wouldn’t take nothing for my journey now.

    “I wouldn’t change the journey,” she said. “because I think the struggle with the weight actually helped me be more relatable and relate more to other people who were in their own struggles. But I’m glad now to be in a position where I feel the healthiest and strongest I have ever been.”

    READ AN EXCERPT: “Enough” by Dr. Ania Jastreboff and Oprah Winfrey

    jane-pauley-oprah-winfrey-golf-cart.jpg

    Jane and Oprah out for a ride. 

    CBS News


    “I feel free”

    Oprah Winfrey grew up riding on dirt roads. Now, on her sprawling Montecito estate near Santa Barbara, California, she owns the road.  She took me for a ride: “This used to belong to my neighbor,” Oprah said. “So, this is 23 acres. Her house used to be right there. We took this fence down, so this became my whole backyard, this.”

    Around here, all of the views are spectacular, especially the one looking back.

    Born in Mississippi in 1954, Oprah Winfrey was a teen beauty queen who became a local TV reporter in Nashville, and then an anchor in Baltimore. “The beautiful thing about my life was that I started out in local television, as you did,” Oprah said. “And when you start out locally, you get this, like, little teeny-tiny thing. But I failed. I failed in Baltimore.

    “They brought me in as a 22-year-old with an anchor guy, white-haired Jerry Turner, who was the most popular local anchor in the country, not just Baltimore. And he totally hated me. He resented me. He would do everything he could to condescend to me any way. I remember one time we were on the set and he said to me, ‘So, you’re from Mississippi? Can you name all the tributaries of the Mississippi River?’

    “And I was, like, ‘All the tributaries of the Mississippi River? No, I can’t.’ He goes, ‘Well, what school did you go to?’ ‘Well, I went to Tennessee State.’ ‘Was that an accredited school? So, you got a degree?’ I mean, that kind of thing. This is in-between the commercial breaks.”

    “Boy, that happened to me in Chicago,” I said. “Started in September, basically was taken off the late news in the spring.”

    Maybe we share a few things. I was a shy kid from Indiana who started as a local reporter in Indianapolis, and wound up on national TV – and Oprah was watching. “You were such an inspiration. I remember calling Gayle that morning, ‘Oh my God.’ It just, it was unbelievable.”

    “Well, that I inspired you!”

    But Oprah famously went on to build her worldwide media empire, and a following that some world leaders can only dream of. 

    I asked, “You have such power. Now that you are this woman undeterred by weight – ‘weight noise’ – what are you gonna do?”

    “That’s a beautiful question, but I don’t feel compelled to do anything,” Oprah replied. “I don’t know what it means actually, other than I feel free.”

    And what about her name being credibly bandied about for the presidency? “No, it’s not gonna happen,” she said. “What I really want to do is to continue to use who I am and what that represents as a force in the world, as a force for good, and to allow people to not let the noises of the world steal their joy.”

    You are such a person of positivity!”

    “I am indeed,” she agreed.

    For all of her astonishing success, it seems that Oprah is still always aware of how far she’s come – how she became something so much bigger than television. “I have to say, there’s a wonderful poem by Countee Cullen called ‘Yet Do I Marvel.’ And I would have to say, yet do I marvel at that, myself,” she said.  

    “Sometimes in the early spring, the frogs are in the pond, and I can open the door and I can hear the frogs out at night. And it sounds just like Mississippi, being on the porch in Mississippi. But the distance from Mississippi to Montecito cannot be measured. It just cannot be measured. And I marvel at, how did this happen? How did it happen that I was able to navigate the waters of racism and sexism and misogynism and all the things that we had to endure? Yet do I marvel!”

    And marvelous, it is.

    I said, “We have little bits of things in common, I’m happy to say. Little bits of things.”

    “Yes. A lot,” Oprah said, “because we were women of this business at a time when it was really tough to be in this business. And now it’s become something else. It’s become something completely new.”

    “But both. It was a time that was tough to be a woman in the beginning. But boy, was the timing good!”

    “Boy, was the timing good! We made the best of it. Yes, we did.”

    jane-pauley-with-oprah-winfrey.jpg

    Jane Pauley with Oprah Winfrey. 

    CBS News


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    Story produced by John D’Amelio. Editor: Remington Korper.

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  • Oprah Winfrey picks Megha Majumdar’s ‘A Guardian and a Thief’ for book club

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Megha Majumdar’s “ A Guardian and a Thief,” already a finalist for the National Book Award and Kirkus Prize, is now Oprah Winfrey’s book club pick.

    Set in the near future, “A Guardian and a Thief” depicts a world of drought, flooding, crime and food shortages as it contrasts a woman whose family is about to emigrate from India to the U.S. with the resident of a shelter who has stolen her purse and the passports it contains. It’s Majumdar’s first novel since her acclaimed debut, “A Burning,” came out in 2020.

    “I was spellbound from Page 1,” Winfrey said in a statement Tuesday. “Megha Majumdar is one of those exquisitely skilled authors who takes us into the story of characters and cultural conflicts and leaves us spellbound until the last word and beyond. Who was the ‘Guardian’ who was the ‘Thief’? I’m still thinking about it.”

    Majumdar’s conversation with Winfrey can be seen on Winfrey’s YouTube channel and other outlets where podcasts are available. Winfrey’s book club is currently presented by Starbucks. Other recent picks include Elizabeth Gilbert’ s memoir, “All the Way to the River,” and a novel by Richard Russo, “Bridge of Sighs.”

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  • FACT FOCUS: No, Oprah Winfrey didn’t block access to a private road amid tsunami warning evacuations

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    Even as the threat of a tsunami swamping Hawaii had passed on Wednesday, social media posts were still circulating claims that Oprah Winfrey had refused immediate access to a private road that would allow residents a shorter evacuation route.

    The warnings followed one of the century’s most powerful earthquakes, an 8.8 magnitude quake that struck off a Russian peninsula and generated tsunami warnings and advisories for a wide swath of the Pacific. Posts on X and TikTok contended Winfrey refused to open her private road, or was slow to do so during the evacuation.

    But the roadway does not actually belong to Winfrey, and efforts to open the road to the public started soon after the tsunami warning was issued.

    Here’s a closer look at the facts.

    CLAIM: Winfrey owns the private road and refused to allow public access for residents trying to reach higher ground, only relenting following public pressure.

    FACT: This is false. Despite being commonly known as “Oprah’s road,” the portion of Kealakapu Road is privately owned — but not by Winfrey. It belongs to Haleakala Ranch, which also owns the land surrounding the road, its president Scott Meidell told The Associated Press. Winfrey has an easement agreement with the ranch, which allows her to use and make certain improvements to the road, her representative told the AP in a statement. Winfrey has paved the road as part of the agreement, Meidell said.

    The decision to open the road to the public is principally up to the landowner, Winfrey’s representative noted. Meidell said Haleakala Ranch “had conversations with Ms. Winfrey’s land management staff during this process. So, they’re consulted to be sure.”

    Haleakala Ranch contacted the local fire department and the Maui Emergency Management Agency just after 3 p.m. local time, shortly after the tsunami warning went into effect, Meidell said. The road was made accessible shortly after 5 p.m., he said, and ranch personnel assisted in the evacuation of around 150 to 200 vehicles until the final group of cars were escorted up the road at 7 p.m.

    Maui County officials said in a press release shortly after 7 p.m. Tuesday that “Oprah’s road” was accessible to the public, an advisory repeated in a 9:30 p.m. update. But Meidell said further evacuations weren’t necessary after 7 p.m. because police had confirmed “at that point the highway was completely empty of traffic.”

    Maui police and the Maui Emergency Management Agency did not immediately return the AP’s requests for comment.

    “As soon as we heard the tsunami warnings, we contacted local law enforcement and FEMA to ensure the road was opened. Any reports otherwise are false,” a representative for Winfrey wrote in a statement first disseminated to news outlets Tuesday night. The decision to open the road was made quickly “when the warning was issued to evacuate, working with local officials and Oprah’s Ranch,” the representative added in a statement Wednesday.

    Cars were escorted in separate caravans that each “had a lead vehicle and a sweep vehicle to make sure that there weren’t any incidents on the mountain road,” Meidell said.

    Haleakala Ranch encompasses nearly 30,000 acres of open space from the southern shoreline to Upcountry Maui, according to its website, and has been family-owned and operated since the late 1800s. The private road connects a public roadway with a highway on the island’s oceanside.

    Some Hawaii residents have long expressed frustration with the large swaths of land that wealthy public figures like Winfrey own on Maui and have advocated against short-term rentals that dot the region and worsen the already low housing supply. The islands have faced a chronic housing shortage only exacerbated in 2023 when a deadly wildfire destroyed most of Lahaina, a town on Maui and the historic former capital of the Hawaiian kingdom. The wildfire was the deadliest in U.S. history in a century that left more than 100 people dead.

    Users claimed with no evidence then that Winfrey had hired private firefighters to protect her land before the fires started, and hired security to keep others of her land during the evacuations. Some X users also spread false claims linking Winfrey to the cause of the blaze. Winfrey teamed up with Dwayne Johnson to launch the People’s Fund for Maui and committed $10 million to help residents who lost their homes in the wildfires. The fund raised almost $60 million as of April 2024.

    In 2019, Winfrey confirmed on X, then Twitter, that county officials were given permission to use the private road immediately after a brush fire started on Maui’s southern area. The road ultimately was not used, Maui County spokesperson Chris Sugidono told the AP at the time.

    ___

    Associated Press National Writer Hillel Italie contributed reporting.

    ___

    Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

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  • ‘Luther Vandross: Never Too Much’ is a gift to his fans 

    ‘Luther Vandross: Never Too Much’ is a gift to his fans 

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    (Luther Vandross: Never Too Much” is now playing in limited release in theaters. It will air on CNN and then on MAX streaming in 2025)

    If you are a fan of Luther Vandross and you think you know most of all there is about the late acclaimed phenomenal  singer, then you are in for an awakening. There is so much more that we don’t know.  

    Dawn Porter’s “Luther Vandross: Never Too Much “ is one of the best music bio documentaries to come along in recent years. Hardcore Vandross fans will be wowed and pleased at the information and footage Porter was able to dig up on the late singer. 

    The film has been well-received on the film festival circuit and was picked up for distribution by CNN Films in partnership with the company of one of his biggest fans Oprah Winfrey’s OWN.

    Before Vandross became one of the world’s beloved male singers, he was a part of a few singing groups, sung a number of commercial jiggles, and sung backup with rock and R&B legends. 

    My biggest surprise was I always assumed Vandross was the recipient of a ton of Grammys. That is not the case. He had so many hits like “Endless Love”, “Never Too Much”, “House Is Not A Home”. It was very frustrating to Vandross. Did he face racism even after he became a one name entertainer? According to Vandross, he did.

    Vandross died in 2005 of a heart attack. 

    Porter took some time out of a busy schedule to talk about her passion project via telephone. 

    AV: Out of all of the great singers there have been what possessed you to want to do a documentary on Luther Vandross? 

    Dawn Porter: I really couldn’t believe that he didn’t have a feature documentary. Someone who has written and produced with Aretha Franklin, and Dionne Warwick and with all the success he had as a solo artist. Having such an impactful career in American music – really the world. I just couldn’t believe there was no film. Of course, I was a fan but I was just curious on where did this man come from?  What was his real story. Working with Sony (Music) gave us the ability to look into that. 

    AV: When did you first discover Luther? 

    DP: He’s one of those artists that you can’t remember the first time because it feels like he has always been around. And the idea that he is still being played, the kids are discovering him now. This summer I was at a few dance parties and he is always being played. He definitely has been a part of my growing up and part of my adulthood. 

    AV: I remember discovering him when he was with the singing group Change.  (Luther left the group because he wanted to do his own music.)

    DP: We have some great footage during that era. There was so much that I didn’t know about him. He did so many jingles that I didn’t know was Luther. 

    AV: You never saw  scandals about Luther’s love life in the tabloids. Did he have a love life? 

    DP: We addressed that quite a bit in the film. He would say that he never found that one person that he was on equal footing and in love with. Of course, there was a lot of speculation about his sexuality, but I’ll have to refer you to the movie. 

    AV: That had to be tough on him as this singer who sung all of these classic ballads and he never found his true love. 

    DP: He was on Oprah like 14 times and they had a lot in common, particularly their public battle with weight. One  time she asked him which of his songs was his favorite and he said, “Any Love.” He said it was the most autobiographical song. He never stopped searching for that love. 

    AV: I guess that is not so uncommon. I know a lot of people who have never found that “one” even if they have been married a few times. 

    DP: I agree with you.. Here is this man responsible for a million babies being borned – Dr. Love. We interviewed (singer/songwriter) Valerie Simpson and she said that he did not want to be known as Dr. Love. He said he wanted to be known for his singing skills but she told him, but that’s what you are. You have given us such wonderful love songs. She wanted him to accept it because he had given so many people the gift of words that they would have wanted to say. 

    AV: What will the hardcore Luther fan discover in this documentary? 

    DP: They will discover a lot about his early life, his teenage years before he was famous, and subsequently how he got discovered. Some of it is reminding people that he was not only a singer but an arranger, a composer, a producer. I think putting it together all in one place will help you understand the magnitude of his talent. 

    AV: Luther was the only male singer I heard referred to as a diva – divo. Did you find he behaved that way later in his career?

    DP: I don’t think he was. I think he was exacting, but he was always that way. We have rehearsal footage of him preparing his dancers and they talked about how they wanted to live up to his expectations.  We have in the film a montage of his elaborate staging and costumes and all he put into his shows. His shows were so legendary. He told his audience, “I will not play with your ticket money.”  He understood that people were playing good money and deserved to be entertained. And he wanted to give as close to perfection that he could provide. That’s what he was going for. It wasn’t diva for diva sake. His attitude was ‘We don’t take our audience for granted.’ 

    AV: What singer was that who fired him from being a backed up singer and told him that he needed to focus on his solo career? 

    DP: That was Roberta Flack. Unfortunately, she wasn’t in any condition to give us an interview so we have archival footage of her describing their relationships. That’s the beauty of this film is where we couldn’t get current footage we found footage of people talking about him. 

    AV: Did you ever get to see him perform live? 

    DP: No, I didn’t but it was fun watching all of the concert footage. We wanted to give people the feeling of watching a concert film. Working with Sony we were able to capture what it would be like to be at one of his shows. 

    AV: How long did it take you to pull it all together? 

    DP: It came together pretty fast considering the complexity of this documentary. It was about a year. 

     Luther: Never Too Much | Official Trailer (2024)

     Luther Vandross – Never Too Much (Official HD Video)

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  • $55 potato chips and a $199 popcorn cooker. These are a few of Oprah’s Favorite Things in 2024

    $55 potato chips and a $199 popcorn cooker. These are a few of Oprah’s Favorite Things in 2024

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    Forget the Macy’s parade, the real start of the holiday shopping season is in Oprah’s hands these days—and she has declared it open.

    Oprah Winfrey, the queen of all media, has released the 2024 version of her Favorite Things list, with 116 items that are now being fast-tracked on many people’s wish lists. This year’s list is a bit longer than 2023, which measured in at 112 items and the majority of items come from either small businesses or those owned by women or minorities.

    “One of my favorite things about this time of year is how open people are to spreading goodwill, and every present you offer is a chance to show someone how much you appreciate them – an opportunity to say, ‘You matter to me, and I am so grateful to have you in my life,’” Winfrey said in a statement.

    A dozen brands are making the list for the first time in 2024. As has become standard, Winfrey is working with Amazon to create a storefront to purchase the items.

    Prices for this year’s list range from $12 for Soap Sox, which are animal-shaped bath scrubbers for kids, to $1,800 for a De’Longhi Eletta Explore espresso machine.

    The complete list is, of course, too long to include here, but a few highlights include:

    Popsmith The Popper – a $199 stovetop mechanism for making popcorn that keeps burnt kernels to a minimum. It’s a high-end version of the Whirly Pop, which was especially popular 10 or so years ago (and remains on the market today).

    Feathersnap Smart Bird Feeder – For $180, this bird feeder will capture HD pictures and video of the birds that come for a snack and send them directly to your phone.

    Bonilla a la Vista Potato Chips – “Trust me, I know potato chips,” Oprah writes. Imported from Spain and fried in olive oil, these snacks will run you $55.

    GymWrap The Pony 2.0 – Developed by actress Nicole Ari Parker, this baseball cap features an extra hole at the top for people with long hair to stick their ponytail through.

    Upcoming event:
    Join business’s brightest minds and boldest leaders at the Fortune Global Forum, convening November 11 and 12 in New York City. Thought-provoking sessions and off-the-record discussions feature Fortune 500 CEOs, former Cabinet members and global Ambassadors, and 7x world champion Tom Brady–among many others.

    See the full agenda here, or request your invitation.

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  • Leonardo DiCaprio endorses Kamala Harris for president

    Leonardo DiCaprio endorses Kamala Harris for president

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    Leonardo DiCaprio is endorsing Kamala Harris for president, with the Oscar-winning actor expressing support for the Democratic nominee in a video Friday.

    “Climate change is killing the earth and ruining our economy, we need a bold step forward to save our economy, our planet and ourselves,” DiCaprio said in the video posted to Instagram. “That’s why I’m voting for Kamala Harris.”

    DiCaprio, long an outspoken advocate for addressing the climate crisis, has supported Democratic candidates in the past. In early 2020, he attended a fundraiser for Joe Biden at the home of former Paramount Pictures chief Sherry Lansing.

    His Instagram caption cited the recent devastation from Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton, which he called “unnatural disasters caused by climate change.” In the video, DiCaprio praised Harris’ ambitious targets for achieving net zero emissions by 2050 and helping to build a green economy. He also noted her involvement in passing the Inflation Reduction Act. As vice president, Harris cast the tiebreaking vote on President Joe Biden’s landmark climate law that was approved with only Democratic support.

    He also criticized Trump for withdrawing the United States from the Paris climate accord and rolling back “critical environmental protections.” Trump, he said, continues to “deny the facts” and “deny the science.”

    With less than two weeks until Election Day, Harris has received the support of many high-profile entertainers including Taylor Swift, Oprah Winfrey, Meryl Streep, Chris Rock and George Clooney.

    The vice president held a rally Thursday night in the Atlanta suburbs with former President Barack Obama and musician Bruce Springsteen. Beyoncé, whose song ‘Freedom’ is a Harris campaign anthem, is expected to be at Harris’ Houston rally Friday, The Associated Press reported Thursday.

    Republican nominee Donald Trump’s celebrity supporters include Elon Musk, Dennis Quaid, Roseanne Barr and Kid Rock. In December 2016, DiCaprio and the head of his eponymous foundation met with Trump, then president-elect, to discuss how jobs centered on preserving the environment could boost the economy.

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  • Harris, Oprah hold Michigan campaign event in talk show format

    Harris, Oprah hold Michigan campaign event in talk show format

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    Using a similar format to her former long-running talk show, Oprah Winfrey hosted a campaign event with Vice President Kamala Harris in suburban Detroit Thursday evening which featured a mix of celebrities, campaign organizers and a crowd of battleground state voters. 

    The event in Farmington Hills, Michigan — which had an in-person crowd of a few hundred and also featured virtual attendees — opened with talk of a “new day” and the sense of “joy” Democrats have associated with the Harris campaign. But the conversation later steered towards issues featuring personal, intimate stories of people impacted by state abortion bans and school shootings. 

    US-VOTE-POLITICS-HARRIS-WINFREY
    Vice President Kamala Harris and Oprah Winfrey at a campaign event in Farmington Hills, Michigan, on Sept. 19, 2024.

    SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images


    The parents of Natalie Griffith, a 15-year-old injured in the deadly Apalachee High School shooting earlier this month in Winder, Georgia, spoke. Griffith’s mother, Marilda, made an emotional plea for a “change to be made” to address gun violence. Her father, Doug — who noted that he was not a registered Democrat — called for metal detectors to be placed inside schools. 

    Harris did not explicitly say if she agreed with the call for metal detectors, but said “we just need to apply common sense.” She repeated her calls for an assault weapons ban and universal background checks. When Winfrey made note of Harris being a gun owner, as she revealed in prior campaigns and repeated in her debate with Trump, Harris said that “if somebody breaks into my house, they’re getting shot.”

    “Sorry, probably should not have said that,” Harris joked. “My staff will deal with that later.” 

    The mother and sisters of Amber Thurman — a Georgia woman who died in 2022 after medical care was delayed due to the state’s abortion ban — also spoke for the first time publicly since the ProPublica report about Thurman was released. 

    “I’m beyond hurt, disappointed…we trusted them to take care of her, you know?” said CJ, Thurman’s sister. “And they just let her die because of some stupid abortion ban. They treated her like she was just another number.” 

    Harris called Thurman’s death “preventable,” and as she has throughout her campaign and vice presidency, blamed former President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court appointments for leading to the overturning of Roe v. Wade. She also criticized states with abortion restrictions but have exceptions “to save the life of the mother,” arguing it should not reach that point.

    “So is she on death’s door before you actually decide to give her help, Is that what we’re saying?” Harris asked. “Like, literally, a doctor or a nurse has to say, ‘She might die any minute, better give her care.’”

    Hadley Duvall, a Kentucky woman who was impregnated by her father at 12-years-old and was able to get an abortion, also spoke. Duvall had been featured in several of Harris’ campaign ads, and also spoke at the Democratic National Convention. 

    The event was livestreamed and conducted in an interview-style discussion similar to Winfrey’s old talk show. It was billed as a way to bring together many pro-Harris coalitions, including “Win with Black Women,”  “White Dudes for Harris” and “Swifties for Harris.” 

    All are groups that have been holding Zoom conference calls to raise money for Harris’ campaign and mobilize voters. Harris campaign advisers saw the event as a way to reach persuadable voters, and Winfrey often structured her questions to be geared towards undecided voters. 

    Several celebrities also appeared by video, including Ben Stiller, Chris Rock, Jennifer Lopez, Julie Roberts, Tracee Ellis Ross, Bryan Cranston and Meryl Streep. 

    Earlier Thursday, Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley panned the event, saying in a statement that Harris was campaigning with “an out-of-touch celebrity, further confirming that the Democrat party is not the party of hardworking Americans – it is the party of elitists.”

    Streep asked Harris what her plan would be if she wins in November and there is another push to try and overturn the election results, as Trump and some Republicans are criminally charged with allegedly doing in 2020. 

    “We will be ready,” Harris said, pointing to Republicans disaffected by the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection that may vote for her. “To try and upend a free and fair election where the American people voted, that was a bridge too far for a lot of people…I think there is absolutely no tolerance whatsoever from the vast majority of Americans for that, and they’ve seen the lies.”

    Harris made a quick reference to her campaign’s legal team, and pleaded for the audience to help curb misinformation and support poll workers. 

    Winfrey, an independent who has endorsed Harris and spoke at the DNC last month, closed the program with a call to undecided voters to choose Harris.

    “This is the moment for people who are tired of all of the bickering and all of the name calling, people who are exhausted by the craziness and the made up stories and the conspiracies. This is the moment you want to get on with your life, because you know that we can do better and that we deserve better.”

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  • Oprah sits down with Elvis Presley’s granddaughter, Riley Keough, in exclusive special airing on CBS

    Oprah sits down with Elvis Presley’s granddaughter, Riley Keough, in exclusive special airing on CBS

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    Elvis Presley’s firstborn granddaughter, Riley Keough, opens up to Oprah Winfrey about her late mother, Lisa Marie, and life in her famous family for an exclusive prime-time special on CBS and Paramount+.

    “An Oprah Special: The Presleys — Elvis, Lisa Marie and Riley,” produced by Harpo Productions, airs Tuesday, Oct. 8, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on CBS. It will stream live on Paramount+ for “Paramount+ with Showtime” subscribers, and will be available on-demand the next day for “Paramount+ Essentials” subscribers.

    Winfrey traveled to Graceland Mansion in Memphis to sit down with Keough for her first in-depth interview since her mother, Lisa Marie, died last year. Before her death, Lisa Marie recorded hours of stories from her life for a memoir, “From Here to the Great Unknown,” which Riley finished co-writing.

    Riley Keough and Oprah Winfrey
    Riley Keough and Oprah Winfrey in a moment from “An Oprah Special: The Presleys — Elvis, Lisa Marie and Riley,” airing Oct. 8, 2024, on CBS and Paramount+

    CBS


    The special features never-before-seen family photos and home videos. It also includes some of Lisa Marie’s personal audio recordings, some of which include memories of her father.

    “I felt my father could change the weather. He was a god to me. A chosen human being,” Lisa Marie writes in the book.

    Keough, an Emmy-nominated actress and director, shares with Winfrey the highs, lows and pressures of being a Presley, and the deep, profound relationship she had with her mother. 

    The memoir, which will be released Oct. 8, is a stunning look inside one of the most legendary American families, detailing Lisa Marie’s childhood, her father’s shocking death, her marriages and her descent into addiction.

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  • Beyoncé hype ran high then popped like a balloon at the DNC

    Beyoncé hype ran high then popped like a balloon at the DNC

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    (CNN) — You may want to avoid the Beyhive today, as it is buzzing and ready to sting.

    There was heightened excitement among many heading into the final night of the Democratic National Convention, not just because Vice President Kamala Harris was set to accept the party’s nomination, but because of hope the woman behind her campaign anthem would “rain on the thunder” and “wave through the waters” of Chicago’s United Center.

    Like most pop culture fantasies, speculation that Beyoncé would make an appearance at the DNC started – and ended – on social media.

    From the moment CNN reported in July that Beyoncé had granted the vice president permission to use her 2016 song “Freedom” for her presidential campaign, there were questions.

    Would Queen Bey make a formal endorsement? Might a concert in support of Harris happen? And even more mind blowing, could Beyoncé and Taylor Swift, two of the biggest artists on the planet, join together in support of Harris in Chi-town?

    Some people swore they saw signs pointing to an inevitable Beyoncé arrival at the convention – her private plane was rumored to have landed at O’Hare, the house band was practicing Beyoncé songs, there were “Cowboy Kamala” sashes in the Washington delegation. Surely, she would come.

    Shasti Conrad, the Washington Democratic Party’s chair, told the Washington State Standard that she is a fan of both the singer and the vice president – a Beyhive and “KHive” member.

    “The Beyhive is sort of what the KHive built themselves after — sort of this rabid fanbase for both,” Conrad said. “So we were like, let’s celebrate the two of them and this cultural moment, political moment — and these incredible women of color.”

    Delegates and attendees wear cowboy hats and “Cowboy Kamala” banners on the first day of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, on August 19. Credit: Eva Hambach/AFP / Getty Images via CNN Newsource

    A bee emoji shared on X by White House political director Emily Ruiz further spiked the hype.

    And in fairness to the fans, there was a concert vibe running through the star-studded DNC all week. After Oprah Winfrey made a surprise appearance on Wednesday night, a post by the X account “Angry Staffer” promised a more momentous moment on Thursday.

    “I’ve been sworn to secrecy, but you don’t want to miss the DNC tonight,” the since-deleted post read. “If you thought the Oprah surprise was big, just wait.”

    On Thursday evening, TMZ reported that Beyoncé would indeed be performing. Media outlets, including CNN, reached out to representatives to confirm, while social media held its collective breath.

    After all, Beyoncé has appeared at numerous Democratic events in the past, including President Barack Obama’s presidential Inaugural Ball in 2008, Obama’s second presidential Inauguration in 2013, and a pre-election concert in Ohio for Hillary Clinton in 2016. Beyoncé also endorsed the Biden-Harris ticket in 2020.

    Then the fever dream ended and the pop culture balloon popped.

    The Hollywood Reporter was the first to have the news that the Grammy-winning singer would not be appearing at the DNC.

    “She was never scheduled to be in Chicago,” Beyoncé’s representative Yvette Noel-Schure told CNN in a statement.

    TMZ issued a mea culpa with “Texas Hold ‘Em” song lyrics to walk back its report.

    “To quote the great Beyoncé: We gotta lay our cards down, down, down … we got this one wrong,” an update on the original story reads.

    The X account that appeared to have gotten the initial ball rolling, Angry Staffer, also offered up an apology on the site, writing “Re: special guest rumor – I’m not sure where it started, but the people who told me aren’t prone to hyperbole.”

    The internet, however, is.

    CNN’s Elizabeth Wagmeister contributed to this story.

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    Lisa Respers France and CNN

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  • Oprah Winfrey Electrifies DNC With Fiery Speech Calling on Independents to Back Kamala Harris: ‘Decency and Respect Are on the Ballot’

    Oprah Winfrey Electrifies DNC With Fiery Speech Calling on Independents to Back Kamala Harris: ‘Decency and Respect Are on the Ballot’

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    Oprah Winfrey was a surprise guest Wednesday on Night 3 of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, delivering a rousing speech that highlighted the differences between Kamala Harris and her GOP counterpart.

    Winfrey, who has kept a low profile in politics so far this election cycle, called on viewers at home and the Democrats at the United Center in Chicago to keep faith in “the best of America” to help the country endure through this period of bitter partisanship. Like other speakers, Winfrey sounded the alarm on the agenda articulated by former President Donald Trump and other far-right forces. “People who would have you believe that books are dangerous and assault rifles are safe,” she said. “That there’s a right way to worship and a wrong way to love.”

    Winfrey didn’t cite Trump by name but there was no doubt about her target. Beware of politicians “who seek to first to divide and then to conquer,” she said. “When we stand together it is impossible to conquer us.”

    Winfrey declared herself to be an independent voter and took aim at Trump’s recent quip to evangelical voters that they only need to vote for him once more and then they’ll never have to vote again.

    “You’re looking at a registered independent who is proud to vote again and again and again because I’m a proud America and that’s what Americans do,” she said. “Values and character matter most of all in leadership and in life. Decency and respect are on the ballot in 2024.”

    More to come

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    Cynthia Littleton

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  • ‘David Makes Man’ actor Akili McDowell is charged with murder in man’s shooting in Houston

    ‘David Makes Man’ actor Akili McDowell is charged with murder in man’s shooting in Houston

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    HOUSTON (AP) — Actor Akili McDowell, who starred in the television series “David Makes Man” and had roles in “Billions” and “The Astronaut Wives Club,” has been charged with fatally shooting a man in the parking lot of a Houston apartment complex, authorities said.

    McDowell, 21, was charged last week with murder in the July 20 shooting death of Cesar Peralta, 20, the Harris County sheriff’s office said. McDowell remained in jail Monday on $400,000 bond on the murder charge. The attorney listed for him in court records did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

    “This is an unfortunate situation and I am in prayer for Akili and those impacted by this tragedy,” said his manager, Jonell Whitt, adding that she had no further comment.

    The sheriff’s office said deputies found an unresponsive man with gunshot wounds after responding to a call about a shooting at an apartment complex on July 20. The sheriff’s office said several witnesses told deputies the man had been in a physical altercation with another man, who fled on foot after the shooting.

    “David Makes Man,” which aired on Oprah Winfrey’s OWN, followed a teen named David, played by McDowell, who tried to juggle relationships between his magnet school friends and drug dealers in his impoverished South Florida neighborhood.

    According to the entertainment database IMDb, McDowell appeared in some episodes of “Billions” and “The Astronaut Wives Club,” and has a role in the recently released movie “The Waterboyz.”

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  • Can You Consume Marijuana On Ozempic

    Can You Consume Marijuana On Ozempic

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    It is all the rage to lose weight and is causing a stir for several reason.  But can you have a a bit of a vape and chill while on it?

    The latest weight loss trend has been the use of Ozempic. A Gallup poll suggested over 6% of adults in the US and Canada have tried it. So over 16+ million have given it a go. Amy Schumer, Kelly Clarkson, Sharon Osbourne, Chelsea Handler, Dolores Catania, Oprah, and Charles Barkley have all tried it. Millions of people struggle with weight and their body image. In the last 12 months 56% of women and almost 42% of men have tried to slim down. And the new hot drug is seen as the silver bullet. But what if you want to relax and chill out while taking it? Can you consume marijuana on Ozempic?

    RELATED: 5 Morning Activities To Help You Feel Happier

    Some people enjoy eating, the taste of the food and the ritual of dining alone or with friends. Dieting and other weight loss programs are often seen as a punshment or negative. And if you want to chill out, alcohol usually interferes with a slimming routines due to sugar and how it is absorbed in the body. But marijuana is a different story. Ozempic works by mimicking a naturally occurring hormone. As those hormone levels rise, the molecules go to your brain, telling it you’re full. It also slows digestion by increasing the time it takes for food to leave the body. This is similar to the effect of bariatric surgery.

    With limited research and data, it seems small amounts of alcohol, such as 1-2 drinks per day with food, are generally considered safe based on initial studies. However, alcohol is known to interfere with blood sugar control mechanisms, which Ozempic is aimed at improving. So there could be issue around the success of the routine.

    Marijuana thought it different in its makeup and how the body absorbs it. Currently, there hasn’t be in research or data showing marijuana interferes with the drug. But, keep in mind Ozempic may interact with oral forms of cannabis (forms you swallow), such as tablets, capsules, gummies and other edibles.

    RELATED: The Most Popular Marijuana Flavors

    The side effects can be troublesome and include nausea, vomiting, constipation, and at times diarrhea. These are related  to the same concept regarding the movement of the bowels and the stomach. The benefits come somehow from the same pathway. Beyond gastrointestinal symptoms, the medication can also cause rash, gallbladder issues, abdominal pain.  It is allows important to talk to health professional when starting something which can have an impact on your body and organs.

     

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    Amy Hansen

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  • The Most Iconic Old Hollywood Restaurants in L.A.

    The Most Iconic Old Hollywood Restaurants in L.A.

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    From its star-studded residents to its rich history, Los Angeles is a city of icons. The glitz and glamour of Old Hollywood never loses its charm, and several restaurants, hotels and bars have made it their mission to maintain that sense of timeless class and elegance. From restaurants with vintage-inspired decor and black-and-white photos to dim-lit bars that have been serving stiff drinks since the 1950s, L.A. is home to several historic hot spots that have long attracted loyal locals and first-time visitors alike.

    Many of L.A.’s most legendary eateries have welcomed icons such as Clark Gable, Humphrey Bogart and Elizabeth Taylor, giving patrons the chance to enjoy a piece of the past as they indulge in comforting cuisine and fine wines. Several of these spots still attract modern-day celebs, so don’t be surprised if you catch a glimpse of your favorite actor or musician while sipping on a glass of red at Dan Tana’s or enjoying breakfast at Chateau Marmont. Whether you’re in the mood for the city’s best dirty martini or want to dine like Marilyn Monroe and Charlie Chaplin with a hearty plate of pasta or freshly shucked oysters, these are the most iconic Old Hollywood restaurants in L.A.

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    Allie Lebos

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  • Oprah reveals new book club pick

    Oprah reveals new book club pick

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    Oprah Winfrey has selected “Long Island” by author Colm Tóibín as her newest book club pick.

    “Long Island,” published by Simon & Schuster, is the sequel to Tóibín’s 2009 New York Times best-selling novel “Brooklyn.” It is about a young woman named Eilis Lacey, who left her small Irish town for a new life in America.

    “Long Island” picks up more than 20 years later. She’s married to a plumber named Tony and is the mother of two teenagers.

    Read an excerpt below.


    “That Irishman has been here again,” Francesca said, sitting down at the kitchen table. “He has come to every house, but it’s you he’s looking for. I told him you would be home soon.” 

    “What does he want?” Eilis asked.

    “I did everything to make him tell me, but he wouldn’t. He asked for you by name.”

    “He knows my name?”

    Francesca’s smile had an insinuating edge. Eilis appreciated her mother-in-law’s intelligence, and also her sly sense of humor.

    “Another man is the last thing I need,” Eilis said. “Who are you talking to?” Francesca replied.

    They both laughed, as Francesca stood up to go. From the window, Eilis watched her walk carefully across the damp grass to her own house.

    Soon, Larry would be in from school and then Rosella from after-school study and then she would hear Tony parking his car outside. She finished work at three so she could be there when they came home each day. It was something she did not want to miss. This would be a perfect time for a cigarette. But, having found Larry smoking, she had made a bargain with him that she would give up completely if he promised not to smoke again. She still had a packet upstairs. 

    When the doorbell rang, Eilis stood lazily up, presuming that it was one of Larry’s cousins calling for him to come and play. However, from the hallway, she made out the silhouette of a grown man through the frosted glass of the door. Until he called out her name, it did not occur to her that this was the man Francesca had mentioned. She opened the door.

    “You are Eilis Fiorello?”

    The accent was Irish, with a trace, she thought, of Donegal, like a teacher she had had in school. Also, the way the man stood there, as though waiting to be challenged, reminded her of home.

    “I am,” she said.

    “I have been looking for you.”

    His tone was almost aggressive. She wondered if Tony’s business could owe him money.

    “So I hear.”

    “You are the wife of the plumber?”

    Since the question sounded rude, she saw no reason to reply. “He is good at his job, your husband. I’d say he’s in great demand.”

    The man stopped for a second, looking behind him to check no one was listening.

    “He fixed everything in our house,” he went on, pointing a finger at her. “He even did a bit more than was in the estimate. Indeed, he came back regularly when he knew that the woman of the house would be there and I would not. And his plumbing is so good that she is to have a baby in August.”

    He stood back and smiled broadly at her expression of disbelief. “That’s right. That’s why I’m here. And I can tell you for a fact that I am not the father. It had nothing to do with me. But I am married to the woman who is having this baby and if anyone thinks I am keeping an Italian plumber’s brat in my house and have my own children believe that it came into the world as decently as they did, they can have another think.”

    He pointed a finger at her again.

    “So as soon as this little bastard is born, I am transporting it here. And if you are not at home, then I will hand it to that other woman. And if there’s no one at all in any of the houses you people own, I’ll leave it right here on your doorstep.”

    He walked towards her and lowered his voice.

    “And you can tell your husband from me that if I ever see his face anywhere near me, I’ll come after him with an iron bar that I keep handy. Now, have I made myself clear?”

    Eilis wanted to ask him what part of Ireland he was from as a way of ignoring what he had said, but he had already turned away. She tried to think of something else to say that might engage him. “Have I made myself clear?” he asked again as he reached his car.

    When she did not reply, he made as though to approach the house once more.

    “I’ll be seeing you in August, or it could be late July and that’s the last time I’ll see you, Eilis.”

    “How do you know my name?” she asked.

    “That husband of yours is a great talker. That’s how I know your name. He told my wife all about you.”

    If he had been Italian or plain American, she would not have been sure how to judge whether he was making a threat he had no intention of carrying out. He was, she thought, a man who liked the sound of his own voice. But she recognized something in him, a stubbornness, perhaps even a sort of sincerity.

    She had known men like this in Ireland. Should one of them discover that their wife had been unfaithful and was pregnant as a result, they would not have the baby in the house.

    At home, however, no man would be able to take a newborn baby and deliver it to another household. He would be seen by someone. A priest or a doctor or a Guard would make him take the baby back. But here, in this quiet cul-de-sac, the man could leave a baby on her doorstep without anyone noticing him. He really could do that. And the way he spoke, the set of his jaw, the determination in his gaze, convinced her that he meant what he was saying.

    Once he had driven away, she went back into the living room and sat down. She closed her eyes.

    Somewhere, not far away, there was a woman pregnant with Tony’s child. Eilis did not know why she presumed that the woman was Irish too. Perhaps her visitor would be more likely to order an Irishwoman around. Anyone else might stand up to him, or leave him. Suddenly, the image of this woman alone with a baby coming to look for support from Tony frightened her even more than the image of a baby being left on her doorstep. But then that second image too, when she let herself picture it in cold detail, made her feel sick. What if the baby was crying? Would she pick it up? If she did, what would she do then?

    As she stood up and moved to another chair, the man, so recently in front of her, real and vivid and imposing, seemed like someone she had read about or seen on television. It simply wasn’t possible that the house could be perfectly quiet one moment and then have this visitor arriving in the next.

    If she told someone about it, then she might know how to feel, what she should do. In one flash, an image of her elder sister, Rose, dead now more than twenty years, came into her mind. All through her childhood, in even the smallest crisis, she could appeal to Rose, who would take control. She had never confided in her mother, who was, in any case, in Ireland with no telephone in her house. Her two sisters-in-law, Lena and Clara, were both from Italian families and close to each other but not to Eilis.

    In the hallway, she looked at the telephone on its stand. If there was one number she could call, one friend to whom she could recount the scene that had just been enacted at her front door! It wasn’t that the man, whatever his name was, would become more real if she described him to someone. She had no doubt that he was real. What she wanted was someone to offer an interpretation of what had happened that would give her some consolation. At the moment, she herself could see none.

    She picked up the receiver as if she were about to dial a number. She listened to the dial tone. She put the receiver down and lifted it again. There must be some number she could call. She held the receiver to her ear as she realized that there was not.

    Did Tony know this man was going to appear? She tried to think about his behavior over the previous weeks, but there was nothing out of the ordinary that she could think of. At the very least, he had come home some days having been with this woman, pretending that everything was normal. At the most, he also knew what the threat was, and he was aware that the man intended to visit Eilis and he did not warn her.

    Eilis went upstairs, looking around her own bedroom as if she were a stranger in this house. She picked up Tony’s pajamas from where he had left them on the floor that morning, wondering if she should exclude his clothes from the wash. And then she saw that that made no sense at all.

    Maybe, instead, she should tell him to remove himself to his mother’s house and she could talk to him when she had collected her thoughts.

    But what, then, if it was a misunderstanding? She would be in the wrong, too ready to believe the worst of a man to whom she had been married for more than twenty years.

    She went into Larry’s room, examining the large-scale map of Naples that he had pinned to the wall. He had insisted that this was his real homeplace, ignoring her efforts to tell him that he was half Irish and that his father was actually born in America and that his grandparents, in any case, came from a village south of the city. “They sailed to America from Naples,” Larry said. “Ask them.”

    “I sailed from Liverpool, but that does not mean I am from there.” For a few weeks, as he worked on a class project about Naples, Larry became like his sister, fascinated by detail and ready to stay up late to finish what he had begun. But once it was completed, he had reverted to his old self.

    Now, at sixteen, Larry was taller than Tony, with dark eyes and a much darker complexion than his father or his uncles. But he had inherited from them, she thought, a way of demanding that his interests be respected in the house while laughing at the pretensions to seriousness apparent in his mother and his sister.

    “I want to come home,” Tony often said, “get cleaned up, have a beer and put my feet up.” 

    “And that is what I want too,” Larry said.

    “I often ask the Lord,” Eilis said, “if there is anything else I can do to make my husband and son more comfortable.”

    “Less talk and more television,” Larry said.

    In the houses in the same cul-de-sac where Tony’s brothers Enzo and Mauro lived with their families, the children, most of them teenagers, did not speak with the same freedom as Rosella and Larry. Rosella liked an argument that she could win by using facts and finding flaws in the other person’s case. Larry, in any discussion, liked to turn the argument into a set of jokes. No matter how hard Eilis tried, she found herself supporting Rosella, just as Tony often started laughing at some absurd point that Larry had made even before Larry did. “I am only a plumber,” Tony would say. “I am needed only when something leaks. One thing I am sure of, no plumber will ever make it to the White House unless they have problems with their pipes.”

    “But the White House is riddled with leaks,” Larry said. “You see,” Rosella said, “you are interested in politics.” “If Larry studied,” Eilis said, “he could surprise everyone.”

    Eilis heard Rosella coming in. She wondered if the usual easy banter among all four of them at the table would be possible now. Unless the man’s visit had been a ruse of some kind, a part of her life was ended. She wished that he had made some other decision about his wife’s pregnancy, one that didn’t involve her or Tony in any way. But then she saw how desperate and how futile such wishing was. She could not force the man not to knock on her door just because she wanted that.

    As they sat down to dinner each evening, Tony would describe his day, going into detail about his clients and their houses, how much dirt often lay in the area near the sink or the toilet. If Eilis had to tell him to stop, it was only because he was making Rosella and Larry laugh too much.

    “That is what puts the food on the table,” Larry would say. “But wait, things were worse this afternoon,” Tony would begin again.

    In the future, Eilis thought, she would watch him to see what he was concealing.

    Having shouted a greeting to Rosella, Eilis went back into the main bedroom and closed the door. She was trying to imagine Rosella’s response, and Larry’s, to the news that Tony had fathered a child with another woman. Larry, despite his swagger, was, she thought, innocent, and the idea that his father had had sex with a woman in whose house he was fixing a leak would be beyond him, whereas Rosella read novels and discussed the most lurid court cases with her uncle Frank, the youngest of Tony’s brothers. If a husband choked his wife and then chopped her up, Frank, who was a lawyer, the only one among the brothers who had gone to college, would learn even more alarming details and share them with his niece. Finding out that her father had been involved with another woman might not shock Rosella, but Eilis could not be sure.

    Strangely, she thought, Tony was more prudish than she was. He grew uncomfortable if a kissing sequence on television went on for too long. He and his brothers often nudged one another at family meals and hinted at jokes that could not be told at the table, but it would go no further than that. They would never actually tell the jokes. She liked how old-fashioned Tony was. She remembered his blushes when they had discussed family planning. In the end, having listened in to a conversation between her two sisters-in-law who seemed to have no problems ignoring church teaching, she had simply put a packet of condoms on Tony’s bedside table.

    He had smiled when he noticed them, opening the packet as though not quite sure what was inside.

    “Are these for me?” he had asked.

    “I think they are for both of us,” she had replied.

    He might have used one of those very condoms to some purpose, she thought, a few months before, thus saving them the trouble that was to come.

    She sat on the edge of the bed. How would she even tell Tony that the man had called? For a second, she wished there was some- where she could go, a place where she would not have to contemplate what had happened.

    The extra room they had built onto the house, once Eilis’s office, was now used by Rosella and Larry for study, although Larry, in reality, spent little time there.

    “I can make you tea, or even coffee, if you want,” Eilis said when she found Rosella there.

    “You did that yesterday,” Rosella replied. “It’s my turn.”

    Rosella had a way of composing herself, not smiling, remaining silent, that set her apart from her cousins. They used any excuse to burst into loud laughter or an expression of wonder while Rosella looked to her mother in the hope that she might soon be taken away from this family gathering to the calmness of their own house. When Tony and Larry set about disturbing this calmness, often by vying with each other in replicating the radio commentary on baseball games, Rosella retired to her study, as she called it. She even had Tony put a lock on the door to prevent Larry from barging in when she was trying to concentrate.

    At times, Eilis found it stifling living beside Tony’s parents and his two brothers and their families. They could almost see in through her windows. If she decided to go for a walk, one of her sisters-in-law or her mother-in-law would ask her where she had gone and why. They often blamed her interest in privacy and staying apart as something Irish.

    But, since Rosella’s looks were so Italian, they did not really think there was anything Irish about her. Thus, they could not imagine where her seriousness came from.

    Rosella tried not to stand out. She paid attention to everything her aunts and cousins said and commented on new clothes and hairstyles, but she had no real interest in fashion. They would have thought her bookish and eccentric, Eilis knew, if she had not been so good-looking.

    “All her grace and beauty,” her grandmother said, “comes from my mother and my aunt. It passed over our generation—God knows I didn’t get any of it—and then came to America. Rosella belongs to an earlier time. And those women on my side of the family had brains as well as beauty. My aunt Josefina was so clever that she almost didn’t get married at all.”

    “Would that be clever?” Rosella asked.

    “Well, sometimes it would, but not in the end, I think. And I am sure you will be snapped up when the time comes.”

    Two days a week, between school and supper, Rosella crossed from her own house to her grandmother’s and they talked for an hour.

    “But what do you talk about?” Eilis asked. “The reunification of Italy.”

    “Seriously.”

    “You know, of her three daughters-in-law, she likes you best.” “No, she doesn’t!”

    “Today, she asked me to pray with her.” “For what?”

    “For Uncle Frank to find a nice wife.” “She means an Italian wife?”

    “She means any wife at all. And with his brains, she says, and his salary and bonuses, and the fact that he lives in Manhattan, he should have women following him in the street. I don’t think she cares whether the woman is Italian or not. Look what Dad found when he went to an Irish dance.”

    “Would you not prefer to have an Italian mother? Would it not make life simpler?”

    “I like things the way they are.”

    As Eilis flicked through the books on Rosella’s desk, it struck her that the life Rosella took for granted depended on her father and his two married brothers, who worked together, applying themselves to their trade, being diligent and dependable so that people trusted them. Most of their work came by word of mouth. Their catchment area was so much bigger than a town, but sometimes it seemed more intimate, more enclosed. It would not be long before someone found out that Tony had made a woman pregnant while working in her house. And news would spread in the same way as it might in a village.

    So far, she had managed to avoid picturing Tony in his work clothes in the house of this woman. She now had an image of him standing up from fixing a pipe and finding the woman of the house looking at him gratefully. She could imagine Tony’s initial shyness. And then he would linger, about to leave. There would be an awkward silence.

    “Are you having problems at work?” Rosella asked. “No, none at all,” Eilis replied.

    “You seem preoccupied. Just now.” “Things are good at work. A bit too busy.”

    When Larry arrived, having pecked her on the cheek, he pointed to his feet.

    “My shoes are perfectly clean, but I have left them outside the door. And I need to listen to the radio. I will be in my room if anyone is looking for me.”

    “Who might be looking for you?”

    “A lot of people. You would be very surprised.”

    Later, Tony appeared and went straight upstairs, as usual, to have a shower and change out of his work clothes before coming downstairs and seeking out Rosella as he had done each day since she was a baby. Often, if she could manage to listen into their con- versation, Eilis would find out something that neither of them had told her, something that had been said by Rosella’s grandmother, or a piece of information about his brothers that Tony confided to his daughter.

    She added potatoes to the stew that she had prepared the pre- vious evening while Larry set the table. She had managed so far to avoid Tony without anyone noticing. He was now in the living room watching television. What she dreaded was his coming into the kitchen, commenting on the delicious smell, or making some joke with Larry. He could fill the air with a presence that was always genial, thoughtful. Her sisters-in-law complained about their husbands’ silences and lack of good humor once they were home with the family. Their mother-in-law had asked Rosella how her father behaved at home.

    “What did you tell her?” Eilis had asked.

    “I said that he finds everything funny and that he is always lovely.”

    “And what did your grandmother say?”

    “She said that you bring out the best in everyone so maybe Lena and Clara could learn from you and then Uncle Enzo and Uncle Mauro might be more cheerful at home.”

    “She just said that to you. I wonder what she says to other people.” 

    “She never says anything she doesn’t mean.” 

    Eilis kept her back to the door, stirring the stew and then standing at the sink washing some dishes. If only this, she thought, could go on. If only Tony could be enthralled by something on the tele- vision and could delay coming to the table for as long as possible. When he did come into the room, she busied herself drying plates. For a moment, in her confusion, she could not remember in what order she normally served dinner. Was it possible she gave Tony his dinner first? Or maybe Larry, as the youngest? Or Rosella? She dished out the stew and crossed the room with two plates, putting them in front of Rosella and Larry. Then without speaking or looking at Tony, she went to get the other two. He was telling Rosella and Larry a story about being attacked by a dog while half his body was in a cupboard looking for a leaking pipe.

    “As soon as he got the bottom of my trousers between his teeth, the brute began to yank. And his owner was a Norwegian woman who had never had a man in her apartment before.”

    Eilis stood listening to him. He did not, she was sure, have the smallest idea of what this sounded like to her. It was just another of his stories. Leaving her own plate aside for the moment, Eilis lifted Tony’s and crossed the room. Just as she was ready to put the plate on the table, she let it tilt until some of the stew began to spill. Then she tilted it some more. The food fell to the floor near Tony. When he looked up at her alarmed, she stood still with the empty plate in her hand.

    Rosella rushed over and took the plate from her mother’s hand while Tony and Larry moved the table itself and the chairs so that the floor could be cleaned. Tony began to pick up pieces of the stew from the floor.

    “What happened to you?” Rosella asked. “You just stood there.”

    Eilis kept her eyes on Tony, who had fetched a sponge and a bowl of water. She was waiting for him to look at her again.

    “There’s more stew in the pot,” Larry said.

    With the floor cleaned and the table back in place, and with a fresh helping of stew for Tony, they ate in silence. If Tony were to speak, Eilis was ready to interrupt him. She realized that Rosella and Larry must see that there was something happening between their parents. But it was Tony on whom Eilis was concentrating; he must be aware that she knew.

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  • Opinion: Something’s rotten, and not just in the state of Tennessee

    Opinion: Something’s rotten, and not just in the state of Tennessee

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    (CNN) — On Thursday March 28th, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee dissolved the board of Tennessee State University (TSU) — the state’s only public historically black college or university (HBCU) — with the stroke of his pen.

    You read that correctly. MAGA Republicans in the Tennessee General Assembly passed a bill to remove every single board member of the state’s sole publicly-funded historically Black university — and the governor signed it. Because, these extremists allege, the university’s financial situation is so dire that the only possible solution was to vacate the board and start from scratch.

    While Lee has since appointed a new slate of board members, it’s important that we see clearly what happened here. TSU’s financial challenges are not the result of some widespread mismanagement on the part of the university’s leadership. In fact, an audit released last week failed to find any evidence of “fraud or malfeasance by executive leadership.”

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    Gevin Reynolds

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  • Oprah Winfrey: Weight-loss drugs gave ‘hope’ after years of public ridicule – National | Globalnews.ca

    Oprah Winfrey: Weight-loss drugs gave ‘hope’ after years of public ridicule – National | Globalnews.ca

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    After decades of being publicly ridiculed, shamed and scrutinized for her fluctuating weight, Oprah Winfrey said she is “really excited” about the availability of weight-loss medication.

    The media mogul’s latest one-off TV program, An Oprah Special: Shame, Blame, and the Weight Loss Revolution, aired Monday night.

    The hourlong broadcast saw Winfrey, 70, candidly discuss obesity and how weight-loss drugs have provided her with “hope.” Winfrey spoke highly of the medications — without mentioning specific name brands like Ozempic — and said she wanted to eliminate the “stigma and the shame and the judgment” around using weight-loss drugs.

    In front of a studio audience, Winfrey said she’s been berated for her weight throughout most of her career.

    “I have to say that I took on the shame that the world gave to me,” Winfrey said. “For 25 years, making fun of my weight was national sport.”

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    The talk show host recalled a 1990 cover of the magazine TV Guide that featured her photo and the accompanying headline: “Bumpy, lumpy, and downright dumpy.”

    Winfrey went on to read aloud several more disparaging tabloid headlines about her weight, including “Oprah: Fatter than ever” and “Oprah warned diet or die.”

    “In an effort to combat all the shame, I starved myself for nearly five months,” Winfrey revealed. “And after losing 67 pounds on a liquid diet, the next day, y’all, the very next day, I started to gain it back.”

    Winfrey called obesity “a disease, not a character flaw.”

    “In my lifetime, I never dreamed we would be talking about medicines that would be providing hope to people like me,” Winfrey championed.


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    Breaking news from Canada and around the world
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    She said the medications, as well as causing her to lose weight, helped Winfrey “no longer blame” herself for her body fluctuations.

    “When I tell you how many times I have blamed myself because you think, ‘I’m smart enough to figure this out,’ and then to hear all along it’s you fighting your brain!” Winfrey said of weight loss.

    She said the medication has helped her stop “constantly thinking about what the next meal is going to be.”

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    Winfrey added she also hikes three to five miles (about five to eight kilometres) every day, while regularly running and eating a heathy diet to maintain her slim figure.

    The TV special featured several interviews with medical professionals about weight-loss medications. Patients who, like Winfrey, have utilized these drugs to combat obesity were interviewed as well. Many of the users spoke highly of the medications, though some users also expressed critical opinions.

    Still, Winfrey noted weight-loss drugs may not be for everyone.

    “For people who feel happy and healthy in celebrating life in a bigger body and don’t want the medications, I say: ‘Bless you,’” Oprah signed off at the hour’s end. “And for all the people who believe diet and exercise is the best and only way to lose excess weight, bless you too if that works for you.”

    An Oprah Special: Shame, Blame, and the Weight Loss Revolution aired only weeks after Winfrey announced she will leave her role on the WeightWatchers board of directors. Winfrey, who had been one of the company’s most prevalent spokespersons, decided not to stand for board re-election after she publicly revealed she was taking an unnamed weight-loss medication.

    Winfrey donated her shares in the company to the Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C.

    In December 2023, Winfrey told People magazine she was using a weight-loss drug as a “maintenance tool” for her fluctuating weight. The disclosure came after Winfrey’s social media followers speculated that the star may be taking Ozempic or another similar medication.

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    Winfrey said she uses weight-loss drugs “as a tool to manage not yo-yoing.”

    Due to popular demand, the manufacturers of several drugs, including Ozempic, have experienced shortages that have continued into 2024. The shortages have affected many Canadian patients with Type 2 diabetes, who treat the condition with drugs like Ozempic. Some diabetics who had been using Ozempic have since been forced to change their medications.


    Click to play video: 'Ozempic shortage impact on Canadian patients with Type 2 diabetes'


    Ozempic shortage impact on Canadian patients with Type 2 diabetes


     

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    &copy 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Sarah Do Couto

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  • New Video Shuts Down Social Media Talk That Kerry Washington Curved Greeting From Oprah (WATCH)

    New Video Shuts Down Social Media Talk That Kerry Washington Curved Greeting From Oprah (WATCH)

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    Whew! One thing about social media: sometimes folks will take a short clip and run with it! Well, that’s exactly what happened to Kerry Washington and Oprah Winfrey following the NAACP Image Awards.

    RELATED: Here’s Who Popped Out & What Went Down At The 55th NAACP Image Awards (Videos)
    Video Shows Kerry Washington Did NOT Refuse To Greet Oprah
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 16: (L-R) Oprah Winfrey, Tyler Perry, and Kerry Washington attend the 55th NAACP Image Awards at Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall on March 16, 2024, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images for BET)

    How Did The Kerry & Oprah Beef Rumors Start?

    Folks were side-eyeing the relationship between these two GREATS after BET shared a clip of Kerry interacting with Tyler Perry on the event’s red carpet. The 18-second video begins with Kerry and Tyler sharing a hug while Oprah holds a conversation with someone off-camera nearby.

    When a photographer requested a group photo, Kerry Washington moved to stand on one side of Tyler while Oprah stood on the other. However, the video seemingly shows Kerry “ignoring” a tap from Winfrey on her shoulder. After they posed for a few shots, Winfrey again reached out and tapped the side of Washington’s leg, seemingly saying goodbye before walking off.

    @bet

    Oprah, @Kerry Washington, and #TylerPerry all in one shot. This moment will go down in #NAACPImageAwards history. 🤩

    ♬ original sound – BET Networks

    Given that Kerry didn’t acknowledge any of the taps, a first impression of the clip might be that Washington was swerving the TV mogul. Social media wasted no time drawing that conclusion in the TikTok post’s comment section. By Monday, the 18-second clip was all over X (formerly Twitter) after collecting over 200,000 views and more than 380 comments on TikTok.

    Peep some of the “beef” narratives below.

    On TikTok, @jasminecaldwell24 wrote, “PEEP KERRY DID NOT ACKNOWLEDGE OPRAH. She knows something.” 

    @favorti3wolf added, “She tried to touch Kerry shoulder then her leg pls leave that lady alone she saw you d**n.” 

    Meanwhile, some attributed Kerry’s behavior (which was later proven to be nothing) to her being friends with Taraji P. Henson. As previously reported, Taraji went viral several months ago after speaking out about pay disparity for Black women in Hollywood and her experiences on the set of ‘The Color Purple.’

    RELATED: Enough Is Enough! Taraji P. Henson Slams Rumors About Feuding With Oprah Winfrey

    @imwithgodru703 wrote, “I felt a little tension between Oprah and Kerry ….Kerry must be team Taraji.” 

    @bluestaff15 added, Kerry and Taraji are sisters, Oprah could never break that bond.”

    SIKE! Ain’t No Beef With These Two Women

    But, it looks like this time, all the rumors are NOT true. That first 18-second clip did not show the interaction Oprah and Kerry actually had, which included lots of love! To clear the air, BET took to TikTok on Monday with a second clip.

    This time, in 16 seconds, we see Kerry eagerly walk up to Oprah with a huge smile on her face. In fact, the women embraced and laughed together before Kerry hugged and greeted Tyler Perry.  Washington also congratulated Oprah on all the love ‘The Color Purple’ received at the award show.

    So, we can put this one to rest, social media detectives. Ain’t no beef here! Just a clip cut a lil’ too short. Happy Women’s History Month y’all!

    Watch the before and after interactions below. 

    @bet

    Replying to @ashbash We loved it, and that good energy between @Kerry Washington and Oprah. #NAACPImageAwards

    ♬ original sound – BET Networks

    RELATED: Come Thru, Bae! DDG Goes All Out For Halle Bailey After Her NAACP Image Award Losses (WATCH)

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    Cassandra S

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  • Megyn Kelly Torches ‘Classless’ Jimmy Kimmel For Terrible Oscars Hosting Performance

    Megyn Kelly Torches ‘Classless’ Jimmy Kimmel For Terrible Oscars Hosting Performance

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    Source YouTube: Megyn Kelly, Jimmy Kimmel Live!

    The former Fox News host Megyn Kelly is speaking out to slam the “classless” Jimmy Kimmel for the way he hosted the Oscars on Sunday night after he used the show to shamelessly bash Donald Trump. Kelly fired back by torching Kimmel and bringing up his documented history of blackface.

    Kelly Eviscerates Kimmel

    Though Kimmel initially avoided politics while hosting the Oscars, he took a shot at Trump at the end of the show after the former president bashed his hosting style on social media.

    “Thank you, President Trump,” Kimmel said, according to CBS News. “Thank you for watching. I’m surprised you’re still up. Isn’t it past jail time?” 

    This didn’t sit well with Kelly, who fired back at Kimmel on her eponymous SiriusXM talk show.

    “He found time to take a shot at Trump, he found time to take a shot at Katie Britt, he did not find any time to make fun of Joe Biden who is the sitting president of the United—I just guess there’s no fodder there, nothing to joke about,” Kelly said.

    Kelly’s guest Andrew Klavan, a conservative political commentator, responded by saying that Kimmel “just following what the news media is doing.” He added that he was surprised that Kimmel never mentioned President Joe Biden, who had just given “the worst State of the Union address in my lifetime,” which he called “ugly and divisive.”

    Related: Trump Rejoices After ‘Loser’ Jimmy Kimmel Suggests He May Be Retiring From Late Night

    Kelly Brings Up Kimmel’s Blackface History

    Earlier in the show, Kelly criticized the Oscars audience, “who laughed and curried favor with the man who wore blackface so many times, he’s second only to Justin Trudeau in his fondness for the practice.”

    Kelly went on to say that the Hollywood stars “absolutely ate up the performance by Hollywood darling Mr. Kimmel” even though “some of the very same celebrities who wanted you to believe they were horrified — horrified — after yours truly said in 2018 that people used to don dark makeup to imitate well-known black celebrities and it wasn’t a big deal.”

    The New York Post reported that this was a reference to Kimmel wearing blackface to portray the black Utah Jazz star Karl Malone in a skit on “The Man Show” back in the 1990s. He also wore dark makeup to portray Oprah Winfrey in another skit. In contrast, Kelly was fired by NBC in 2018 after she simply weighed in on those wearing blackface, saying that “in the 70s/80s, it used to be viewed differently.”

    “Obviously Kimmel’s love of blackface was not a deal-breaker for ABC — which already employs him as a late-night host and which, in addition to its many blackface awards shows, also produced and promoted many shows and stars in blackface,” Kelly lamented.

    “It appears the real sin with blackface, you see, is talking about how standards on it have changed, not actually wearing it,” she continued. “You can still win Oscars and host the Oscars after doing that.”

    Check out her full comments on this in the video below.

    Related: Blackface Comedian Jimmy Kimmel Mocks Fox For Anti-Woke Segments: ‘Make Your Own Homophobic Potato Dudes’

    Kelly Rips Kimmel For Robert Downey Jr. Joke

    Kelly also ripped into Kimmel for a joke he made at the expense of Robert Downey Jr., who won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar on Sunday night for his work in Oppenheimer.

    “This is the highest point of Robert Downey Jr’s career… well, one of the highest points,” Kimmel said during the opening monologue. When Downey Jr. responded by tapping his nose in a sign of recognition, Kimmel asked: “Was that too on the nose or a drug motion you made?”

    A visibly annoyed Downey Jr. reacted to this by signaling Kimmel to move on from the joke.

    “What Kimmel did last night, was he tried to mock people’s weaknesses and things they had genuinely fought hard to overcome, like he did to Robert Downey Jr, who wound up being a favorite of the night,” Kelly said.

    “But before he won Best Supporting Actor for Oppenheimer, Kimmel, in his opening monologue, decided to take a shot at—everyone knows about Robert Downey Jr’s long history with drugs and alcohol,” she continued. “It’s something no one celebrates but he needs to be given credit for overcoming.”

    After Kelly played a clip of the exchange, she added, “What was that? That was just classless.”

    Kelly concluded by comparing the way Kimmel hosted the Oscars to the way the British comedian Ricky Gervais hosted the Golden Globes on five separate occasions in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2016 and 2020, according to Newsweek.

    “Last night, one of the things I think stood out about Kimmel’s hosting was, he didn’t get it. The reason Ricky Gervais did so well when he hosted those Golden Globes and just eviscerated everyone in that room is because he was making fun of them on things that we knew were true,” Kelly explained.

    “Y’know kind of, their abuse of their own power, their self-importance and that kind of thing and he was punching up, which is okay,” she stated.

    Check out Kelly’s full comments on this in the video below.

    The hypocrisy of Kimmel and the rest of Hollywood never ceases to amaze, and good for Kelly for calling them all out. No wonder the Oscars has been struggling to get anyone to watch for years!

    Now is the time to support and share the sources you trust.
    The Political Insider ranks #3 on Feedspot’s “100 Best Political Blogs and Websites.”

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    James Conrad

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  • Period Auntie! Angela Bassett Stands By Her Viral Reaction To Losing 2023 Oscar To Jamie Lee Curtis

    Period Auntie! Angela Bassett Stands By Her Viral Reaction To Losing 2023 Oscar To Jamie Lee Curtis

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    Angela Bassett sat down with Oprah Winfrey and shared her feelings about her 2023 Oscar snub.

    Bassett was nominated for Best Actress in a Supporting Role. Her portrayal as Queen Ramonda in the ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’ film received stellar reviews.

    RELATED: Fans In Uproar After Angela Bassett Loses ‘Best Supporting Actress’ Oscar To Jamie Lee Curtis

    Oprah Reminisces on The Disappointing Moment 

    After losing to Jamie in March 2023 the living legend’s facial expression became a meme. In their interview for OWN, Winfrey recalled watching the events transpire from her home.

    “We’re all in our pajamas, watching you on Oscar night … 30 years after you were nominated for ‘What’s Love Got to Do With It’ but didn’t win. So I just knew your name was going to be called and then when they didn’t, I was beside myself,” the media mogul said.

    Additionally, Oprah mentioned the viral meme showing Angela’s reaction, per Hollywood Reporter. Her facial expression is shown when Jamie Lee Curtis’ name is announced.

    “So Angela Bassett’s face became like all over the internet,” Oprah said. “People are saying your disappointment showed, but I thought you handled it really well.”

    Watch Angela’s viral expression below.

     

    Angela Bassett Speaks On Her Disappointment After The Loss

    Angela agreed with Oprah’s comment. In her mind, she handled the moment with class, despite her disappointment.

    “I thought I handled it very well, also. And that was my intention, to handle it very well,” Bassett said.

    “It was, of course, a supreme disappointment, and disappointment is human,” Angela Bassett added. “So I thought, yes, I was disappointed, and I handled it like a human being.”

    In addition, Angela said, “There are going to be these moments of disappointment that they’re going to experience, but how do you handle yourself in the midst of them? So, we’re going to smile, we’re going to be gracious, we’re going to be kind, we’re going to party — anyway.” 

    Less than a year after the 2023 Oscars snub, Angela Bassett received an honorary Oscar at the Governor Awards. The January 2024 honor marked her first Oscar in her decades-long career. At the time, she gave a powerful speech and thanked the Black actresses who paved the path for her to have a successful career.

    RELATED: Win-Win!? Social Media Reacts To Angela Bassett’s Honorary Oscar & Friendly Kiss With Regina King

    “…This honor isn’t just for or about me,” she said. “What I hope this moment means is that we are taking the necessary steps toward a future in which it is the norm, not the exception, to see and embrace one another’s full humanity, stories and perspectives…This must be our goal, and to always remember that there is room for us all. When we stand together, we win together.” 

    Angela Bassett Stands By Her Viral Reaction To Losing 2023 Oscar
    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 09: Angela Bassett accepts an honorary Oscar onstage during the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences’ 14th Annual Governors Awards at The Ray Dolby Ballroom on January 09, 2024 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

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    Carmen Jones

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